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Searls, Donald T.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Education, 1990
Indices that detail aspects of student test responses include overall aberrancy; tendencies to miss relatively easy items; tendencies to correctly answer more difficult items; and a combination that indicates how the latter tendencies balance each other. Mathematics test results for 368 college students illustrate the indices. (SLD)
Descriptors: College Students, Computer Assisted Testing, Higher Education, Response Style (Tests)
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Pomplun, Mark; Ritchie, Timothy; Custer, Michael – Educational Assessment, 2006
This study investigated factors related to score differences on computerized and paper-and-pencil versions of a series of primary K-3 reading tests. Factors studied included item and student characteristics. The results suggest that the score differences were more related to student than item characteristics. These student characteristics include…
Descriptors: Reading Tests, Student Characteristics, Response Style (Tests), Socioeconomic Status
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Strang, Harold R. – Journal of Educational Measurement, 1977
The effects of option familiarity, length, and technicality on guessing or multiple choice items were investigated in two experiments. Generally, these college undergraduates tended to favor familiar, non-technical, and longer options when guessing on multiple choice tests. (JKS)
Descriptors: Cues, Females, Guessing (Tests), Higher Education
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Holden, Ronald R.; Jackson, Douglas N. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1985
Explored utility of disguise in structured self-report assessment of psychopathology, using university students. Data indicated that under normal test-taking circumstances, use of disguised test items was not advantageous. This relationship was moderated by several dimensional parameters. Results supported rational strategy of test construction,…
Descriptors: College Students, Higher Education, Personality Measures, Psychopathology
Edwards, John; McCombie, Randy – 1983
The major purpose of the three studies reported here was to investigate possible differences in agreement/disagreement with attitude statements as a function of their type (with regard to positivity/negativity) and personalism. In the first study, 90 students completed scales on energy conservation and on having good study habits. Agreement varied…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Higher Education, Response Style (Tests), Semantic Differential
Huntley, Renee M.; Plake, Barbara S. – 1981
This investigation of the effect of making a set of alternatives conform grammatically to a test item stem showed there is subject sensitivity to such cues. Content-free versions of American College Testing Assessment Experimental Social Science items representing singular-plural and vowel-consonant agreement without inappropriate grammatical…
Descriptors: Cues, Grammatical Acceptability, Higher Education, Response Style (Tests)
Dyer, Robert; And Others – 1976
A literature review and bibliography on questionnaire construction are presented. The broad definition of questionnaire includes scales, structured interview forms, survey forms, and similar paper and pencil instruments used to elicit responses and collect information. A comprehensive literature search of journal articles, books, and reports in…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Interviews, Literature Reviews, Questionnaires
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Huntley, Diane E. – Journal of Allied Health, 1985
Response changes of two classes of 30 dental hygiene students each were tabulated on multiple-choice questions on quizzes, midterms, and final examinations. Response changes were classified as wrong to right, right to wrong, or wrong to wrong. Significantly more responses were changed from wrong to right than from right to wrong. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Class Rank, Dental Hygienists, Grades (Scholastic), Higher Education
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Mentzer, Thomas L. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1982
Evidence of biases in the correct answers in multiple-choice test item files were found to include "all of the above" bias in which that answer was correct more than 25 percent of the time, and a bias that the longest answer was correct too frequently. Seven bias types were studied. (Author/CM)
Descriptors: Educational Testing, Higher Education, Multiple Choice Tests, Psychology
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Rindler, Susan Ellerin – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1980
A short verbal aptitude test was administered under varying time limits with answer sheets specially designed to allow items that had been skipped to be identified. It appeared advantageous for the more able (based on grade point averages) but disadvantageous for the less able to skip items. (Author/RL)
Descriptors: Aptitude Tests, Difficulty Level, Higher Education, Response Style (Tests)
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Johanson, George A.; And Others – Evaluation Review, 1993
The tendency of some respondents to omit items more often when they feel they have a less positive evaluation to make and less frequently when the evaluation is more positive is discussed. Five examples illustrate this form of nonresponse bias. Recommendations to overcome nonresponse bias are offered. (SLD)
Descriptors: Estimation (Mathematics), Evaluation Methods, Questionnaires, Response Style (Tests)
Swearingen, Dorothy L. – 1998
The problem of response set is important for questionnaire designers and interpreters, but the public is affected as well if policy is determined on the basis of unsupported conclusions. This study focused on one of the most researched response sets, extreme responding (ER), or extreme checking styles, and its relationship to one dimension of…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Style, College Students, Higher Education
Ley, Ronald – 1981
A method for measuring recognition memory (free of distractors) and false recognition was based on the assumption that the subject was "honest." A distractor-free test of word recognition (a single-item test trial in which the 36 targets were presented prior to the 36 distractors) was compared with a traditional target-distractor…
Descriptors: Discrimination Learning, Group Testing, Individual Testing, Memory
Noonan, John R.; Von, Judith M. – 1985
Although the Rotter Incomplete Sentence Blank (ISB):High School Form has been used to distinguish between normal and abnormal adolescents, it has been hypothesized that in facility placed juvenile delinquents' highly conflictual responses (i.e., those that index maladjustment) reflect removal from home and agency placement rather than long-term…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Adolescents, Correctional Institutions, Delinquency
Green, Kathy – 1981
Item response changing as a function of test anxiety was investigated. Seventy graduate students enrolled in a basic statistics course completed 73 multiple-choice items on the course content and the Test Anxiety Scale (TAS). The TAS consisted of 25 items that students indicated were descriptive (true) or not descriptive (false) of themselves.…
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Graduate Students, Higher Education, Multiple Choice Tests
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